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Kilmanns Organizational Belief Survey

At the bottom of this page, you can order Kilmanns Organizational Belief Survey directly from amazon.com or barnesandnoble.com. Click here to see this assessment's Sample Results and Interpretive Materials. Just below is some background information about collective beliefs as well as our unique organizational survey.

NOTE: We use the Organizational Belief Survey, along with the Culture-Gap Survey, in our recorded online course: Culture Management.

CAN PEOPLE CONTROL THEIR SURROUNDINGS?

This survey assesses whether you believe you can control the key aspects of your organization that affect your performance and satisfaction. For convenience sake, your score on the Belief Survey can be sorted into one of three categories:

External Control means you believe that most of what goes on in your organization is determined by outside forces: your coworkers, your boss, your work group, your department, your organization, or people outside your organization (such as customers and suppliers).

Internal Control means you believe that most of what goes on in your organization is determined by inside forces: your own attitudes, decisions, actions, and efforts to influence your surroundings.

Mixed Control means you believe that sometimes you can control what goes on, while at other times you cannot influence much at all.

In some situations, people's beliefs are exactly in line with reality: They believe they cannot influence what goes on and, indeed, they can't. Any of their attempts at change or improvement are continuously stymied by insurmountable barriers. In other situations, however, people's beliefs are considerably out of line with reality. For example, it may indeed be possible for organizational members to influence what goes on but, because they do not believe they can succeed, they do not even test their beliefs and give it a chance. Worse still is the case in which an organization gives its members an opportunity to improve performance and morale: Yet members do not want to believe they could make a real difference, so they refuse to try.

It is very difficult to know for sure which of these three scenarios is true in an organization: whether (1) beliefs are in line with reality—because members cannot improve their performance no matter how hard they try; (2) beliefs are unknowingly out of line—because they have not been tested recently; or (3) beliefs are knowingly out of line with reality—because people prefer, quite intentionally, not to be responsible or accountable for their behavior.

If an organization showed little interest in attempting to improve itself, perhaps the first scenario would be plausible. But when an organization is proceeding to implement change, it is hard to argue that real improvement cannot possibly take place. In this case, ironically, the one thing that can hold the organization back is its own members' outdated and self-serving beliefs.

After members complete the Belief Survey, they can graph their results (as work groups, departments, or the entire organization) on Organizational Belief Profiles, which reveal the distribution of beliefs according to External Control, Internal Control, and Mixed Control. Then, by discussing these results as a group, the members will be able to rethink whether their perceptions of various constraints, limitations, and restrictions in the situation are actually real or largely imagined (from outdated experiences). An open, candid, and thoughtful discussion along these lines will help to align individual—and collective—beliefs with reality, which is more likely to foster constructive action than continued resignation.

Ultimately, the challenge is to question any individual's, work group's, or department's beliefs about External Control—especially during those times when the organization is trying to improve its functioning. Even more important, a belief in Internal Control must be fostered actively in order to overcome the debilitating effects of Mixed Control—let alone External Control. Employees need to test their reality explicitly, rather than assuming—unknowingly—that they cannot control what goes on in their organization even when they are being given a sincere opportunity to do so. Indeed, without developing a collective belief in Internal Control, an organization cannot change and improve its performance—even with the best of intentions.

The Kilmanns Organizational Belief Survey takes only fifteen minutes on average to complete and another ten minutes or so to graph the Belief Profile of a work group of five to fifteen members.